February 2, 2000

To:Prospective Grant Applicants

Re:Invitation for Grant Requests for the Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund FiscalYear1999-2000

The Air Resources Board (ARB) invites you to submit a grant request to the Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund (Rice Fund) in response to this Invitation (IGR 99-01). The Rice Fund provides cost-sharing grants for projects which utilize Sacramento Valley rice straw. To be considered, your completed application package must be received by

4:00 p.m. on Wednesday, March 15,2000. A total of $1.2 million is available for this year’s grants.

For this year’s solicitation, we are particularly interested in ethanol production projects. With the phase out of methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) from California’s gasoline, significant demand for ethanol is expected in California. Because a single ethanol plant could use 150,000 tons of rice straw, representing about 15 percent of the total available rice straw, the ARB would like to advance this significant use of rice straw.

The attached Program Description and Invitation for Grant Requests (IGR) 99-01 describes the funding criteria, the required contents of a grant request, and the procedure for submitting a grant request package to the Rice Fund Program.

Grants will be awarded based on the selection criteria contained in this IGR. A successful grant request will reflect high degrees of technical, fiscal, and administrative excellence and will demonstrate the project's likelihood to become a permanent, operating facility that uses significant amounts of rice straw annually.

All applicants are encouraged to attend an informational workshop at ARB's office located at 2020 L Street, Sacramento, California, on February 16, 2000, from

1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. At the workshop, the ARB staff will discuss the application requirements and answer questions.

California Environmental Protection Agency

Printed on Recycled Paper

Prospective Grant Applicants

Page 2

Top-scoring applicants also will be required to make brief presentations of their projects at a public meeting at the ARB’s Sacramento office in early April2000, and may be interviewed by grant reviewers on the following days. Grants are expected to be awarded at the Board’s May 2000 public meeting.

Information about the Rice Fund Program, including an electronic version of this IGR, may be found on the Internet at:

Applicants are encouraged to check the Rice Fund Web site for any changes to the schedule and for new information about the Rice Fund Program. Applicants are also encouraged to be on the Rice Fund e-mail list to receive notices by e-mail of any changes.

Questions about the Rice Fund Program may be directed to Ms. Lesha Hrynchuk by telephone at (916) 322-7297 or by e-mail at .

We appreciate your interest in the Rice Fund Program.

Sincerely,

Robert Fletcher, Chief

Planning and Technical Support Division

Attachment

THE RICE STRAW

DEMONSTRATION PROJECT FUND

PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

AND

INVITATION FOR GRANT REQUESTS

FISCAL YEAR 1999-2000

Issued by the California Air Resources Board

February 2, 2000

FOREWORD

The Connelly-Areias-Chandler Rice Straw Burning Reduction Act of 1991 (the Phase Down Act) mandated the phase down of rice straw burning in California’s Sacramento Valley. When the Act was written, it was anticipated that a new market for rice straw would be created that would provide an alternative to burning rice straw. However, eight years into the phase down, approximately 97percent of the straw not burned continues to be incorporated into the soil, a practice that the rice growers object to because it is costly and may be conducive to increased incidence of crop diseases. In its 1997 status report, the Advisory Committee on Alternatives to Rice Straw Burning estimated that, at the current rate of development, only two percent of the straw produced in the year 2000 would find commercial uses.

In 1997, when the Phase Down Act limited rice straw burning to 38 percent of the acreage planted, rice growers turned to the California Legislature seeking relief from the phase down. The resulting legislation, Senate Bill 318, authored by Senator Mike Thompson, created the Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund (the Rice Fund) and directed the California Air Resources Board to administer it. The Rice Fund provides cost-sharing grants for projects which utilize California rice straw according to criteria adopted by the Air Resources Board at its January29,1998, public meeting in Sacramento.

During the last two years, a total of about $3 million has been awarded from the Rice Fund for five demonstration and commercialization projects. This is the third and last Invitation for Grant Requests that is authorized for the Rice Fund Program. Approximately $1.2million is available for grants for this fiscal year.

Information about the Rice Fund Program may be found on the Internet at the following address:

Applicants are encouraged to check the Rice Fund Web site for any changes to the schedule and for new information about the Rice Fund Program. Applicants are also encouraged to be on the Rice Fund e-mail list to receive notices by e-mail of any changes.

Questions about the Rice Fund may be directed to Ms. Lesha Hrynchuk by calling

(916) 322-7297 or by e-mail to .

TABLE OF CONTENTS

SECTION 1 - PROGRAM DESCRIPTION......

INTRODUCTION......

GOAL OF THE RICE FUND......

TYPES OF ELIGIBLE PROJECTS......

FUNDING......

REQUIRED MATCH......

APPLICATION PROCESS......

SELECTION PROCESS......

TECHNOLOGY FEASIBILITY......

PROPRIETARY INFORMATION......

SCHEDULE......

SECTION II - SELECTION CRITERIA......

SCORING......

RATING NUMBERS......

SCORING GUIDELINES......

SECTION III - GENERAL INFORMATION ABOUT GRANT REQUESTS AND GRANTS

GRANT REQUEST QUALIFICATIONS......

DEFINITION OF PROJECT......

DEFINITION OF APPLICANT......

EXAMPLES OF REQUIRED MATCHING FUNDS......

PROJECT COSTS......

GRANT......

GRANT DISBURSEMENTS......

PROGRESS REPORTS......

GRANT MONITORING......

PROPRIETARY INFORMATION......

WHEN AND WHERE TO SUBMIT GRANT REQUESTS......

QUESTIONS ABOUT THE RICE FUND......

SECTION IV - GRANT REQUEST CONTENTS......

TITLE PAGE......

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY......

TABLE OF CONTENTS......

DESCRIPTION OF PROJECT......

COMMERCIALIZATION PLAN......

PERSONNEL DESCRIPTION......

APPLICANT FINANCIAL INFORMATION......

PROJECT SCHEDULE......

ATTACHMENTS......

TABLE 1 - CHECKLIST FOR ITEMS REQUIRED......

FORMS

Application And Authorization For Rice Fund Grant...... Form 1

Applicant Financial Information...... Form 2

Budget Submittal Form...... Form 3

Applicant Prior Investment...... Form 4

In-Kind Contributions...... Form 5

Confidentiality Provision...... Form 6

APPENDIX

Disclosure of Public Records...... Appendix

California Air Resources Board Rice Fund IGR 99-01

SECTION 1 - PROGRAM DESCRIPTION

Senate Bill 318 (1997, Thompson) created the Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund (the Rice Fund) and directed the California Air Resources Board to administer it. The Rice Fund will provide grants of up to 50 percent for projects which utilize California rice straw. As the law requires, the Air Resources Board developed the funding criteria in consultation with the Department of Food and Agriculture, the Trade and Commerce Agency, and the University of California. This document contains the funding criteria for the Rice Fund Program which was adopted by the Board at its January 29, 1998, meeting.[1]

INTRODUCTION

Approximately 500,000 acres of rice are grown in the Sacramento Valley, producing over

a million tons of rice straw per year. Until the ConnellyAreiasChandler Rice Straw Burning Reduction Act of 1991 (the Phase Down Act) was enacted, burning had been the primary means of disposing rice straw. The Phase Down Act required that rice growers in the Sacramento Valley phase out the burning of rice straw, and beginning in 2000[2], it allowed for only a limited amount of burning for disease management. Although there have been numerous ideas for using rice straw, none which consumes significant amounts has achieved commercial application. Of the rice straw not burned, only about three percent is now removed from the fields and used; the remaining 97 percent is plowed into the soil.

GOAL OF THE RICE FUND

The goal of the Rice Straw Demonstration Project Fund is to foster the emergence of commercially self-sustaining markets for rice straw. The Fund was established to provide financial assistance to projects which show the greatest potential for creating such markets. Because SB 318 intends much of the unburned rice straw to be used offfield by 2000, preference will be given to projects which 1)have the greatest potential for becoming operational within the next few years, and 2) have the greatest potential for consuming large amounts of rice straw.

Because many of the rice growing counties[3] are considered economically disadvantaged, SB 318 specifies that funding preference be given to projects which could be replicated throughout the rice growing regions of the Sacramento Valley. SB 318 also specifies that public and private support shall be demonstrated for successful projects, including local community support from the rice growing community where the projects would be located.

TYPES OF ELIGIBLE PROJECTS

All eligible projects must use Sacramento Valley rice straw, must bring at least 50 percent matching funds, and must be technically feasible and sound. All required information must be provided in applications as specified in this Invitation for Grant Requests, and these applications must be signed by the applicant. Proposals not meeting these four basic requirements will be deemed non-responsive and will not be reviewed or considered further.

For this year’s solicitation we are particularly interested in ethanol production projects. With the phase out of methyl tertiary butyl ether (MTBE) from California’s gasoline, significant demand for ethanol is expected in California. Because a single ethanol plant could use 150,000 tons of rice straw, representing about 15 percent of the total available rice straw, the ARB would like to advance this significant use of rice straw.[4]

The focus will be on projects with high potential for commercialization in the near term rather than on projects in the research stage. Research may be only a small component of the overall project. The grant proposal must demonstrate the project’s potential for being commercially self-sustaining after the Rice Fund grant has been expended. All proposed projects must clearly identify their expected sources of rice straw, and they must explain to what extent these sources are ensured.

One barrier to developing a marketplace for rice straw is the lack of an infrastructure to handle the straw from the harvest in the rice field to the businesses that would use the straw. To overcome this barrier, the Rice Fund will consider rice straw collection and marketing projects at early stages of development if they have the potential to enhance rice straw commercialization projects.[5] Straw collection and marketing includes getting the straw from the field to the end user (that is, collection, densification, removal from the rice field, transportation, and storage).

FUNDING

For the 1999-2000 fiscal year, approximately $1.2 million is available for grants from the Rice Fund. This is the third and last year for which Rice Fund grants are authorized.

Not more than 50 percent of the cost of any project will be funded, during a period not to exceed three years. There is neither a minimum nor a maximum amount of funding that will be approved for a project; it is anticipated that, in order to meet the goals of the Rice Fund, a small number of large grants will be made, rather than many small grants.

Although this Invitation for Grant Requests (IGR) represents a bona fide intention to fund projects, the ARB reserves the right to reject any or all grant requests not judged to meet the goals of the Rice Fund.

REQUIRED MATCH

Funding sources for a proposed project are categorized into the following three types: (1) the Rice Fund Grant, (2) funding provided by the applicant, and (3) funding from other sources. Requirements of each type are discussed below. Examples are given on pages 12-13.

The Rice Fund Grant

The Rice Fund portion may not exceed 50 percent of the total project cost. This means that at least 50 percent matching funds are required for all projects funded under the Rice Fund program. Grant applications which seek more than 50 percent of the total project cost will not be reviewed or considered further.

The Applicant

The applicant (see page 11 for definition of applicant) must provide a minimum of 20 percent of the total project cost, or an amount equal to the funding requested from the Rice Fund, whichever is less. This requirement is to demonstrate significant, personal commitment to the project by the applicant--that the applicant is also taking significant risk in the project.

This 20 percent requirement may be partially fulfilled by prior investments directly related to the project and by in-kind contributions during the project. See page 25 for a description of the prior investment credit and in-kind services credit. If either or both of these credits are used, new cash investment by the applicant may be reduced to a minimum of 10 percent of the total project. Applicants will be required to demonstrate their ability to provide matching funds, and, if these credits are used, evidence of prior investment spending and in-kind contribution commitments must be demonstrated.

Other Funding Sources

After the Rice Fund and applicant contributions, the remainder of the project cost must be provided by other funding sources. Other funding sources include, but are not limited to, the following: grants, loans, or loan guarantees from other governmental agencies, other institutional financial entities, such as banks or credit unions, or private investors. Applicants will be required to provide evidence that these funds have been secured or committed by the funding sources.

Example

If the total proposed project costs $1 million, the requirements are:

(1) the maximum amount that could be provided by the Rice Fund would be $500,000 (50percent of the total).

(2) the minimum the applicant would be required to provide would be the least of the following:

a) $200,000 (20 percent of the total), or

b) an amount equal to that requested from the Rice Fund, or

c) $100,000 (10 percent of the total) if the applicant demonstrates having made prior investments directly related to the project or proposed in-kind contributions that will be provided during the project (or any combination of the two) to make up the balance for the amount required under a or b above. In-kind contributions are included in the project’s estimated costs; but prior investments may not be included in the project’s estimated costs.

(3) other funding sources for the balance of the funds needed to cover the total project cost.

Figure 1


** Applicant’s 20 percent minimum contribution may be partially met by in-kind and prior investment. A total of at least 50 percent matching funds for the current project is still required, regardless of the applicant/other funding mix.

APPLICATION PROCESS

Applicants shall submit to the ARB complete and detailed grant requests by the required deadline to be eligible to compete for the Rice Fund grants. All grant applicants are encouraged to attend a workshop to be held approximately midway through the application period. At this workshop, the ARB staff will explain the application requirements and answer questions. Top-scoring applicants will be asked to make brief presentations of their projects at a public meeting in the Sacramento area. The schedule for fiscal year 1999-2000 is shown on page 6.

Grant requests will be initially screened to determine that (1) the projects would contribute to commercial uses of Sacramento Valley rice straw, (2) the minimum matching fund requirements are met, (3) the basic technology and science are sound, and (4) the applications are complete.

Selection criteria for projects that pass the initial screening are presented in Section II. General information about the grant requests and the grants are included in Section III. Information to be included in the grant request is described in Section IV.

SELECTION PROCESS

Grant requests passing the initial screening will be evaluated for technical and business merit by expert advisors and reviewers using the criteria given in Section II. The reviewers may interview applicants if additional information or clarification is needed. The ARB staff, advisors, and reviewers may ask an applicant to re-scope the proposed project, schedule, and budget. The ARB staff and reviewers may visit the project sites of finalists prior to making final recommendations regarding the award of grants. Due to limited resources, all eligible projects will not necessarily be awarded grants, and some projects may be offered grants for smaller amounts than requested.

The expert advisors and reviewers will be selected from the public and private sectors. The identity of the advisors and reviewers will be kept confidential, although their affiliations will be public. Expert reviewers will be required to sign confidentiality agreements and conflict of interest disclosures. Grant requests will be ranked according to the scoring process explained in Section II, Selection Criteria. Grant requests with the highest rankings will be nominated to the Air Resources Board for funding. In order to promote a diversified rice straw marketplace, high-ranking, similar projects may not all be recommended for funding. The Board is expected to make the final funding determination at its May 2000, meeting.

Successful applicants will be required to sign legally binding grant provisions. Grant provisions, which will be tailored to each grant recipient, are discussed in SectionIII.

TECHNOLOGY FEASIBILITY

Technologies that, in the view of the ARB staff and the expert reviewers, have not been demonstrated as being feasible for commercial application will not be considered for funding under the Rice Fund program. In addition, projects that rely upon or require the development of technologies beyond the scope of the proposed project are unlikely to receive high technical scores. All grant requests must present scientific and technical information demonstrating: